Weekly advertiser-appeal. (Brunswick, Ga.) 188?-1889, October 19, 1888, Image 7

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SOME HOTEL HAWKSHAWS. TYF=t Or BEAUTY.- Tilt Men Who Have Become Indlipene- ! No poMlblllty of Arriving at Any Stnnd- ablo to Our Bonifaces. ard—Some Odd Ideas. "OK *>e'8 a hotel detective, is he? I Various, indeed, are the opinions held Well, what on earth good is a hotel de- I by a wide diversity of races regarding ‘ “ ‘ their beauties, though it is often difficult tective? What do hotels want with de tectives, anyhow?” This remark, made in a petulant tone, was uttered in the corridor of the Hoff man house tho other afternoon by a western man who was on a visit to the metropolis and had been looking at tho art treasures of the cafe. He eyed in a contemptuous way the well dressed little man, with a slouch hat, who was lean ing against a pile of trunks near the ele vator. A friend showing tho western man tho city sights had happened inci dentally to point out Detective Jacobs as one of tho features of a big metropolitan hotel. . Ten minutes later the westerner saw the little detective step up to a well dressed man in a group of threo who had just sauntered into tho art gallery. “I’ll havo to ask you to move on, sir,” the deteetivo said. “Who nro you?” growled tho man, ungrily, “what do you mean by talking to mo that way?" “Just what I say, and I mean it,” the little man replied, undaunted, “and here’s who I am, and I know you per fectly well.” Tho littlo detective threw open his coat and showed his glistening deteetivo shield. Tho well dressed man qpt short his bluster instantly, and walked quickly out into tlie street. He was a local bunko man, who had casually dropped into the hotel cafe with two out of town crooks. The conversa tion with the littlo deteetivo was anima ted, but not so loud that anybody in the art gallery could understand it. Tho Gothamito who was showing tho west erner around knew what was up, though, and turning to his friend said pin; fully: “That’s somo good a hotel deteetivo is. That was a confidence man that ho talked to. Maybo he’d havo caught on to you if it hadn’t been for the den tive." It was an apt illustration of one of tin- duties of tho hotel detective. In tli ■ ' marvelous perfection of tho cquipmen. of a metropolitan hotel in tho 1::> : _u- years tho private detective has r.. o to bo an indisiKjnsable detail, and today there is not a hotel in town that enjoys any select patronage at all that does not employ n guardian, who is empowered to make arrests if necessity arises. Somo of the detectives are men specially as signed from tlie police force, and whose salary is guaranteed by the hotel in con sideration of tlie policeman’s exclusive service. Often, however, tho special guardians aro regular privato detectives. They aro men well trained in detective methods, and enjoy tho advantago of a wide and varied acquaintance with tho faces of metropolitan rascals and tho confidence operators of tho country. Keeping tiie hotel clear of this class of crooks, however,is only a small part of tho hotel detective’s work. Upon them de volves in most cases the supervision of tho porters and hall boys, and all. the army of help that a big Gotham inn has to employ. If a guest loses anything in the hotel, or outside of it either, ho. is sent at onco to the hotel deteetivo to con sult about its recovery; and if chamber maids or porters find articles that have been mislaid or lost, they are expected to bring them direct to tho hotel detective, and he, in turn, hands them over to tho hotel proprietor, or his representative, to bo delivered to tho owner. It is also tho detective’s duty to pro tect his employers from tho numerous and persistent army of pests known as tho hotel beat, and it is duo to the pres ence of detectives, in every well regulated city hotel, that New York has ceased to be a spot where this peculiar gentry can for people bred under another sky to shore their enthusiasm. The Circassian women, who havo a sort of conventional reputation for loveliness, ore affirmed by those who know them best to bo far from worthy of their celebrity. Short legs, glaring red hair, faces so long and nar row that their heads seem to linve been squeezed between two boards and flat tened, noses out of proportion to tho rest of the features and complexions of a dull, lead liko hue, scarcely constitute beauty according to our standard. Tho Moors and the Tunisian Jews regard cor pulence as absolutely essential to beauty, and tlie inmates of rich men’s harems are stuffed with nutritious food, like Stras bourg geese for the market. Tho Chi nese poets sing of tlie deformed feet ns “golden lilies.” and the locking of their women in attempting to walk as tho “waving of a willow." Other races have equally odd ideas of what constitutes loveliness, for they “im prove” their )>ersons by flattening their foreheads, tattooing their skins, cutting off their lingers, filing their teeth or dyeing them black, blue or tartan, paint ing their bodies, slitting their ears, com pressing their waists, putting stones, bono or metal through their lips, cheeks, or ears, and in a dozen other ways trying to enhance the i>oor ’prentice work of nature. A Felatah lady dyes her liands and feet with hennali, stains her teeth alternately blue, yellow and purple, one hero and tliero being left of its natural color, pen cils her eyelids with sulphurct of anti mony, and dyes her locks with indigo. Tho Hydah woman inserts a plug of wood or ivory through her lower lip until it represents the hideous appearance of a fleshy shelf over her chin. A Chinese or a Siameso lady cultivates long nails. A Hottentot liello cannot get her nose flat enough, or a Parsian beauty liers high enough. On tho northwest coast of America no reproach is more bitter than for ono In dian girl to tell another that “your mo ther was too lazy to flatten your head.” Tattooing is almost universal among half civilized or savage races; in Now Zea land the Maori women, before they began to imbibe European prejudices, even tat tooed their lips, lest they should have the reproach of being red. 'Some races slit their ears until they hang i: i loops on their shoulders. Others insert huge rings and other ornaments through the cartilage of their noses. The Louisi- ade Islanders regard the lid of a sardine box as a particularly neat piece of jew elry, and even European women have not yet ceased to suspend bits of stone and metal through tho lobes of their ears. There is, in truth, no possibility of ar riving at any standard of beauty, tho “points” of which would not do injustice to some of the competitors. Even among tho whites there are various ideas of what constitutesjgood looks. Liko man ners and morals, beauty is very much a matter of sky. Just ns an Indian told a traveler what a comfort his son was to him, hecauso “liocould steal more horses than any hoy of his age,” so a western frontiersman assured a visitor that his daughter was tlie "finest girl” in the settlement, for she could “heft a barrel AsnighuSo“^rmenwho SELF EXTINGUISHMENT OF F1RES.J a»0 in tho least rheumatio or Cllflly should Automatic Sprinklcrs-A Tinsmith's Itx- sleep in blanket wraps over the night- 1 perienre—Several Curious Instances, gown, preventing aches andcolds caught I nu, apparatus which is most promptly by tossing the arms over the head, as ' used i* cases of burning buildings, and wefi as tbo loss of sleep that often comes a j so w itlt tho least efficacy, is the human of disturbed circulation People who use voico> notwithstanding the historical fact their brains habttuafiy, teachers, writers thut blowing hag accomplished nothing artists, must keepwarm as the saving of 6inco the day3 of Jt , richp ‘ Y et there are their abilities. They must havo fires numerous ins.ances whero fires have been ear y and uso footwarmers by day and extinguished through causes connected night, and dress like Esquimaux if neces- with $ heir origin> a ° d completely out- sary, or congestion of the brain or lungs is the penalty. Tlie inflammation of tho lungs which carried off Georgo Eliot nml Mrs. Browning was descended from tlie chilliness and poor circulation which side of precedence that they serve os In stances of tho happening of tho unox pected. In this connection wo do not refer to the fires extinguished by auto- ., , . , , malic sprinklers, where the result is these bram workers had borne for years. clearly 4 at has teen expected to happen. Caro must be taken with all this heat- ' Notwithstanding tho fact that when a mg. to have a current of warm, fresh air firo oc Cur!) on % t protected by auto- circula ing in the rooms and to have it ; malic sprinkled, thoseprescntavail them- healthily moist. Such precautions give ; se(ves * of a „ t ho menus of grace in tho a soft and lovely complexion, equal to the | „ ha of tll0 usua , flru ..p^ratus „ t hand, famousi Newport bloom. The best ivay to j yet 'there nro numerous instances where secure this constant ventilation without p lrcs i lave occurred at night or in rooms ^ Is by having the topof the window vacantat Ul0 time, where the fact has fitted w ith a perforated board, pierced by j te^ made known only by water per- many conical borings, only a quarter as ; co x a ting; through tho floors, or tho sound wido at tho center as at each surfaeo of | 0 f t ; 19 automatic fire alarms, or from the the hole. This gives a fine, forciblo play > S p r i n k]ers which have already come into of mmuto currents through the room in- a ‘ ctive operation( tho firo ] iavill g called •InH’n rlrvi,’- ,s down means for self extinguishment, n wv«. , jj ut y le instances which wo havo in mind nro thoso where tlie menus of ex tinguishment were not expected, as in tho well known cathedral building in Boston, wliero a fire, caused by sponta neous ignition in a storeroom, melted tho lead water pipes, and tlie water issuing from them extinguished tho fire. A sim ilar instanc* happened in a building in Market street, Philadelphia. Somo sheet metal pails wero returned by tho pur chaser to a tinsmith in Chester, Pa., with the complaint that they wero not tightly made. Tho manufacturer resoldered them, and in order to test his work filled them with water and hung them upon hooks at the ceiling. While tho men wore at dinner during tho noon hour, a firo heated the upper part of tho room so that tlie hails connecting tho handles to tho pails bccamo unsoldered, and tho dropping of tho pails of water dashed out tho fire. Somo waste left upon tho top of a steam pump at Watertown, Mass., blazed from spontaneous ignition, and this in turn set tiro to tho lagging around tho steam cylinders and tho feed pipe, whero it melted tlie soldered attach ments of a continuous automatic oiler, Tho Bteam from tho feed pipo was dis charged through the small tubes formerly leadiug to the oiler, and extinguished tho fire. There havo been numerous in stances of fires which liavo ceased for want of air. During tho war of tho re bellion attempts wero mado to burn Now York city, as tho rpsult of a conspiracy, fires being started in several hotels; but in order to prevent prematuro detection tho culprits closed up tlie rooms so tightly that tho tiros were smothered. At a hotel in Woonsocket tho steam pipes caused a fire in tho spaces in tho wali3 of the building, which was,extinguished for want of air to support combustion. Tho time of tlie firo is unknown, as its occur rence was not discovered until somo time afterward, when in the progress of somo alteration to tho building tlio facts were made apparent. It may 1» interesting to know that in tki3 instance tho steam heating service wn3 ordinarily used at a pressure of about a woman’s invention, and a very clever one for keeping rooms perfectly healthy and fresh. It is a littlo remarkable that a plain American woman should have worked out a plan of cheap, efficient ventilation on tho same principles as the French in vention which drew tho npplauso of scientific men years later. To keep the air moist tho simplest way is to keep a pan of water in tho heat reg ister, with a largo sjiongo in it, or a wet towel hung with ends in the water, giv ing off moisture to tbo air which floats over it. Pans of water alone do very littlo good, though tetter than nothing, Tho moisturo must be directly in the path of tho air to be absorbed by it. The water cans for stoves should bo largo enough to cover the whole top and te kept clean and full of fresh water. Such water pans purify tlie air os well as keep it moist, a;t they absorb impurity. A littlo niter, iodine and salt in tho water is very strengthening to breathe, having a mild effect of sea air.—Shirley Daro’s Letter. Preparing a Nerve Skeleton. One of the most interesting features of tho convention of state homeopathic physicians is tlie completion by Dr. It. B, Weaver, demonstrator of anatomy at the Homeopathic college, of a piece of work which has occupied his closo at tention for six months. It is a complete expose of all tho nerves of tho human Ixxly, exactly in tho jiosition they occupy during life. Some idea can lw formed ef tho labor involved when it is remem bered that the human body contains up ward ef a million nerves of various sorts. Dr. Weaver, who lately traveled in Europe, was struck with the want of somo specimen of nnatomy showing tho nerves only. Procuring the body of a colored woman, who had, died in a very emaciated condition. Dr. w’cater, work ing ten hours a day for upward of six months, and chiseling the bones away piece by piece, managed to get .what ho wanted. As seen tho other day, tho figure, pinned to a blacklioard in a pol ished frame, looked at a distance like a ! very dollcato drawing in white of tho of pork and lick her weight in wild j ttotodtttet I four poumlsto the square inch durmgtlm cats.’ —London Standard. I the delicate lines were rnallv nerves, coldest weather and that the safety valve was so arranged that tiio pressure could tiie delicate lines wero really nerves, somo as delicate and lino ns silk. The dura mater of tho skull and backbone nro retained and also tlie eves. The nerves . ... -. , , - , * ignited leaking gas, and tins in turn set of the spinal cord nro so fine and so closo ” _ _ never exceed ten jiounds. A spark of static electricity proceeding from a belt cotton on lire, which oin-rated tlioauto.iia- thrived The petty "thievery of guests’ I mado to ascend its steep side by a series valuables has also come to te a rarity, j of zigzags or swing this way ami tjiat and nowadays tbo man of means, stop- way ami that in fewer than nineteen ping atauy well regulated New York ho- I times ore. tlie top is reached. From j The Highest Inhabited Valley. Presently, directly in out front, stood a great high hill, and it seemed at first glanceos though further progress was ' together that a vorv flno needle had to bo i . ,, , ,■ . , . , . impossible. But man’s ingenuity over-1 used to separate them. Portions of the ! tic sprinklers and extinguished it. An at comes mighty obstacles, and as this one i skin arc also preserved, but every particlo | " a *. mnue o could not te turned the road had teen of bone and tissue lias teen removed.— Philadelphia Inquirer. new dwelling Hunger In Water Filters. A most astounding revelation liaacomo tel, can feel as secure as if lie wero trav- where we left tlr*' 'Trent bed to its sum- j to tiiose v.-lio liavo been confidently trust- eling with a private station house of las | mit this barrier is at least 1,200 feet high, | ing to appliances for purifying their own in tow. More than all, however, j and when we had reached tho top I found j drinking water. It seems that tho tho old time harvest of victims that Ilun- , myself at tlie western end of tlio upper j ordinary filter, instead of rendering the gry Joe and liis pals used to gather from Engadim-. _ I water pure and safe, is actually tho hotel corridors is all cut off. All this tho detective has to do for the regular salary, but ho has legitimate ]icr- quisites. These aro tho more or less lib eral fees that good natured out-of- towners, who want to see what the life lestroy a block of at Brookline, Mass., tefore tlie buildings were entirely finished. Some people, alarmed by tho smoke which was seen in each division of tlie structure, rushed in to save doors mid portable fixtures, when it was noticed that tlie tire.; did not appear to gain any headway, and when the smoke had en tirely died away, it was found that the incendiary liail placed lighted candles in sawdust and other inflammable material in drawers ami closets, but with such limited supplies of air that combustion could not lie stipiiorted and tlie fires te- camc smothered.—Engineering. THE ETHICS OF SUICIDE. This is the lottiest, most extensive high j means of producing just tlie opposite re- vallov in Europe, and perhaps tlie high- | suit. The Rhode Island Medical society, est inhabited valley in tho world. Its through Dr. Swarts, shows that somo average height is 5,400 feet abovo the inters when first used do remove a mo- level of the sea, and that is higher than j jiortion of disease germs. But aftei^Be- tlie top of famous Rigl, near Lucerne. I jng in use only a few days there is a of a big city really is after dark, pay for j which everylxxly thinks a wonderful nl- ; marked increase in tho number pf col- straiglit tips on tlio places whero tho ele- I titude. It is a plain forty or fifty miles ; onies of germs in tho filtered us com pliant “cuts up his most flamboyant and ; long and a mile or so in width, which pared with tho unfiltered water. In ono student forced to spend a summer in tlie startling shindig's." It is worth a hand- I which has many largo towns, luxurious j instance the unfiltered water showed the city, “but I cannot endure the noise." some sum to tho hotel deteetivo who j meadow lands, and several Alpine lakes i presence of thirty-six colonies, while tlio Possibly lie did not stop to consider that, pilots a party of strangers through tlio j that finally How off into tho Inn river, j filtered contained tho enormous number in making such a declaration, ho placed multitudinous and more or less pictur-I nml the whole inclosed in majestic moun- of 2,000, 5,000, 0,000, and even more, ; himself in illustrious company. Thomas Tlio Demincfntlon of Noise. lean tear tiie heat very well,’’raid a esquo maze of after dark spectacles i tains so nwfully high ttiat they aro for- That is, tlio poison caught up by tho known to tho experienced man about [ ever covered with snow nml colossal I filter the first few days becomes tho town os “tho sights.” And tliero aro j glaciers, all so fantastically Bhapcd and source of a vast multiplication of tho few more experienced men about town glittering that tlio spot lias quite a polar ' dangerous element. So look to your than your quick witted hotel detective. New York Sun. aspect. In other parts of Switzerland precautions, and then bo on your guard, eternal snow is never found below an al-1 If you cannot constantly cleanso your Tho tVomlrotu Weather Flout. That remarkable specimen of tho vege table world, tho “weather plant,” con tinues to excito considerable interest. Men of science, who on its first discovery were unwilling to express an opinion on its prognosticating virtues, now ueree, after extensive experiments, that tho ... . . ... . , , shrul/fs in truth prophetic. Thirty-two in their country and they both assed thousand trials made during the last mc <' vhon 1 tolJ them how thc 5’ ma,1 ° three years tend to prove its infallibility. titude of about 8,000 feet, but this limit is not reached on tho borders of tho En- fcadine until wo ascend as high as 0.000. Hoofs of English Houses. Shingled roofs are unknown in Eng land and on the continent. I talked with two men, intelligent English working men, about the construction of buildings Tho plant itself is a legume, commonly called the “Paternoster pea,” but known in botany as tlie Abrus Poreginus. It is a native of Corsica and Tunis. Its leaf and twig stiv glv resemble those of tho acacia, 'i !.e more delicate leaves of its upjier branches foretell the state of the weather forty-eight, hours in ad- i lower and hardier leaves (when I told them how they roofs in America) wliat shingles were; they had nover seen or heard of them, and laughed, when I described them, at the Yankee notion of making “wooden roof slate.” They thought their thatched rnofo must be much better, every way. limn our bhingled ones. In Whittlcsca I saw square topped garden walls sur mounted by caps of thatch, to shed the rain. In all this town I did not sco filters you had better destroy them.— illustrative of tho different kinds of courage observablo in different races, Lord Wolseley tells us that at tho storm ing of Lucknow our troops found them selves in presence of a gate house, from tho upper stories of which a severe lire Carlyle “could not abide" a noise, espe cially that of the. morning crowing of cocks. Wallenstein, accustomed as lie jjci ;;l was to tlie din of liattlo, had an uncon querable dread of the barking of dogs, and even tlie clatter of the largo spurs fashionable i:i Ills day. In order to in sure quiet, he engaged twelve |iatrols to make regular circuits alxmt bis house night and day. Neither Julius Ca?sar nor tiio philoso pher, Kant, could tolerate tho crowing of poor eliaiiti-deer, who, indeed, seems to liave very :u'vfrieiidsaiuongthestudi' was kept up on them. Tho only access ousand sensitive. Schopenhauer exceeds to the upper stories was by some very I almost all loveia of quiet in tlie extrava- narrow winding staircases, hardly admit ting one man at a time. Tlio English soldiers shrank for a moment from wliat seemed certain death. But tho Sikhs rushed in, went up the staircases with in:: a moment’s hesitation, and in five minutes had thrown every rcliel out of the windows. Yet tlio Sikhs would not Have stood up man to man ugainst Eng lish infantry. There is also the coutj peculiar to certain individuals ganco of Ills denunciation of noise. lie declares that <he amount which a man can bear with case i< in inverse ratio to liis mental pov. cr. "If I hear a nog ten ting for hours on the thres.zi'd of n !io;:ao." he writes. tioiidi kind nr I-rains I inhabitants."— vance, while it., lower and hardier leaves peculiar to certain iadi indicate all atmospheric changes throe veranda, a piazza or a porch no place ta j„ rnrl . Ji which zri-.c davs beforehand. The indications con- where one could sit out of doors and te for doatli and tlio belief sist in a change in the position of tlie leaves and in the rise and fall of the twigs and branchlets.—Pall Mall Ga zette. protected from tho raysp^ the sun—not even an awning.—’William T. Tidsloy in Lyons Republican. to a te'tcv ar. I A Mysterious Inconsistency—Tho Animal - Kingdom—Moral Cowardice. A very mysterious inconsistency in human nature lies in the contrast be tween life which mokes self preservation its first love, and that utter contempt nnd intolerance of it which induces self de struction. By all human laws, tho man who takes another’s life in defending his own is held guiltless of murder; his deed h accounted justifiable in recognition of t’le savin ; instinct with which the creator l.a* m ’ompanied the gift of life to nil his i t ■ cures. With the earliest conscious!!.' .. / young animal* this in stinct iqiji.-:t. in iiuiiuityi.ini shrinking from dan r- r. real or imaginary; and down to i i" lowest order of beings, a wound'd thing will exert its last strength to eschaving its existence blotted out. As for the human species, wo have it on Scr.pturc authority that “all that a man hath will he giro for his life." In view of this, who that Is unaware of tho fuels would expect to so con stantly hear of men and women, and even children, finding Ufo unbearable and ending all? What a surprising vio lation of this innate principle it scorns, when for this or that cause, mid often for no causo that is evident, some choose death rather than life! Suicide is not entirely confined to the human species. There aro numerous well authenticated instances of different animals deliberately killing themselves when circumstances rendered lifo no longer desirable. A recent traveler in tho tropics tells of coming at various times upon tho skeleton of a spi-cics of poisonous serpent within a circle of leaves of tlie prickly cactus, and later the riddle was solved by his seeing some monkeys engaged in surrounding a sleep ing reptile with the spinous vegetation. Upon awaking nnd finding itself im prisoned anil all its attempts to escape futile, tlio serpent presently took refuge jn stinging its own Iiody nnd dying at once. It is commonly reported Hint the same thing happens when a poisonous snako is hemmed in by fire, in a spasm of desperation at finding no chance <>t es cape, it turns its means of self defense into means of self destruction, Tlio animal kingdom is a law unto itself. Not so with man. Ho Is subject to tho higher law of duty nnd accounta bility; and no environment can te called hopeless to ono who believes in a gra cious overruling power and the hotter lifo to come. A portion of tlio alarming number of current suicides, it must be confessed, nwaken only tho sincerest pity in every susceptible nnd tenovolent heart, and probably there are very many inoro cases of this kind, were tlio secret causes thut have actuated the victims brought to light. Yet wherever human law is founded on tbo divino law, self destruction must necessarily te regarded as a crime. A man’s buildings are not his own in tho senso that ho con set them on lire nnd bum them down with impu nity; much loss is his lifo—a possession which cannot be restored—so exclusively personal that ho tuts the right to end it by violence in an hour of discourage ment or disgust. Tho yearly list of suicides in somo of tlio countries of Europe is appalling to contemplate. Tho waters of tho Seine givo up tlicir dead doily, and drowning is but ono among tho common methods for shuffling off this mortal coil. Pas sion, impetuosity mid, abovo all, infidel ity, nro prominent factors in recruiting tho army of suicides. Statistics of all nations show that occasionally there oc curs wliat lias been called an opidemic of suicide; though whether this is an illustration of tho forco of example, or tho result of some general impelling force, such ns temperature during tho oxhausting heat of summer, remains an unsettled question. That the mouth of July has long been noted for tlio large number of its suicides favors tho latter conclusion. Of direct causes among young people, affairs of tho heart, lovo matters that liavo taken an unfortunate turn, must te reckoned the leading one. Very often, too, tho circumstances at tending these cases ore unspeakably pa thetic. Next como losses of money and business, friends and health. Of crim inals who liavo recourso to dagger, bul let or repo to evado just penalty, it is unnecessary to speak. There is a moral cowardico in fleeing from tho liattlo of lifo, which strikingly contrasts with tho patient, heroic endur ance of multitudes of men and women in every land and in all sorts of hard Conditions. To tho tempted it might servo as a tonic to read history on this point, or tetter, to recall events. Think, for example, of the crow of tlio Jean nette in their frozen fastnei Capi. DeLong and bis men in' dying of slow starve bravo to tlie last. But what L . mul tiie streets of a city, views of pinched and haggard fi toiling decrepitude, for heroes and lues that shall bo forever nameless?- Lavinia li. Goodwin in Boston Globe. Tlio Victims of Fright. Tlio Oriental legend tliat represents cholera meeting tlio traveler flying from tho scourge, and telling him that the majority of rim dead wero the victims of fright, not of tho plague, seems to apply to the yellow fever scare in tho United States. If tli* ramo number of people who die in Nf*F York in a single season of iineoinonia. consumption, or avoidable rcclJent*. fell victims to yellow fever or ai.yoth.r epidemic, tho city would te kv; :\ i ef inhabitants, and panic nnd eon : : m would prevail. Tlio scare er. ' ■ 1 s much mere suffering and disturbance than tho disease itself. Heneo in somo fouthern countries where it ii endemic it attracts i;o more tiotieo than ir.' e if the ..ter evils that edict I he 1- . Cni’.—.te is ono cf ilia a a Week.